Abstract
We obtained four pointings of over 100 ks each of the well-studied Wolf-Rayet star WR 6 with the XMM-Newton satellite. With a first paper emphasizing the results of spectral analysis, this follow-up highlights the X-ray variability clearly detected in all four pointings. However, phased light curves fail to confirm obvious cyclic behavior on the well-established 3.766 day period widely found at longer wavelengths. The data are of such quality that we were able to conduct a search for event clustering in the arrival times of X-ray photons. However, we fail to detect any such clustering. One possibility is that X-rays are generated in a stationary shock structure. In this context we favor a corotating interaction region (CIR) and present a phenomenological model for X-rays from a CIR structure. We show that a CIR has the potential to account simultaneously for the X-ray variability and constraints provided by the spectral analysis. Ultimately, the viability of the CIR model will require both intermittent long-term X-ray monitoring of WR 6 and better physical models of CIR X-ray production at large radii in stellar winds. © 2013. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Ignace, R., Gayley, K. G., Hamann, W. R., Huenemoerder, D. P., Oskinova, L. M., Pollock, A. M. T., & McFall, M. (2013). THE XMM-Newton/epic x-ray light curve analysis of WR 6. Astrophysical Journal, 775(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/775/1/29
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.